| Declan McCullagh on Thu, 7 Oct 1999 04:27:23 +0200 (CEST) |
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| Re: <nettime> cyber-communism |
At 19:05 10/6/1999 -0400, nettime's_roving_reporter wrote:
>[In just one month Richard Barbrook's seminal Cybercommunism manifesto,
>posted in four long installments on nettime [Mon, 6 Sep 1999 00:56:56
>+0000], appears to have triggered a revolutionary shift in the
>consciousness of the average net user. He (as we learned from the
Oh. Of course. Tens of millions of users around the world read that
manifesto and have shifted their consciousness appropriately, perhaps
spurred along by the widespread coverage it received such as the Newsweek
and Time cover stories and 60 Minutes special report, not to mention the
endorsement by leading CEOs and statesmen. Heck, my AOL-using grandmother
called me last night and tried to convert me to the cause. Did I miss
anything?
-Declan
PS: Just for the hell of it, I'll include my review of Lessig's forthcoming
book. Not "cybercommunism," but maybe close enough that the same criticism
applies.
Date: Wed, 06 Oct 1999 13:03:57 -0400
To: politech@vorlon.mit.edu
From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
Subject: FC: Review of forthcoming book by Larry Lessig: "Code"
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http://www.wired.com/news/news/politics/story/22101.html
Lessig Suffers from Bad Code
by Declan McCullagh (declan@wired.com)
3:00 a.m. 6.Oct.99.PDT
Remember technorealism? If not, you're
lucky to have missed one of the more
forgettable fads of early 1998.
At a Harvard Law School conference that
spring, a host of left-leaning intellectuals
passed out a turgid manifesto and
demanded additional government
involvement in the infrastructure of the
Internet. The technorealists argued that
the future is too important to be left to
programmers, engineers, and executives.
Instead, they claimed that technical
standards "are too important to be
entrusted to the marketplace alone."
But they never explained why Washington
bureaucrats would be any smarter or do a
better job.
Fortunately, the world forgot about this
silliness and moved on.
Sadly, Harvard Law School professor
Lawrence Lessig didn't, and has expanded
that "technorealism manifesto" into a
400-page book called Code, and Other
Laws of Cyberspace.
Lessig, a former special master in the US
v. Microsoft antitrust trial, readily admits
that "much in this book draws from the
picture that [author David Shenk] and his
technorealists have sketched."
And it suffers from the same flaws. It's
not that Code is poorly written, because
Lessig is -- for a lawyer, at least -- an
entertaining author who offers real-world
examples like the Communications
Decency Act, death-porn scribbler Jake
Baker, and the ICANN domain name
disputes to buttress his argument.
And it's not that that Lessig is entirely
mistaken, for he makes many well argued
and cogent points. Yes, public key
cryptography is one of the most
important discoveries of this century. It is
true that the design of technology can
influence society, and that commercial
firms can corrupt and even pervert
supposed industry standards. By ginning
up their own custom HTML extensions,
Netscape and Microsoft have done
exactly that.
The real problem is that Lessig's proposed
solution is no better. He bemoans that
too much of the Internet is run by
companies and individuals instead of by
bureaucrats and legislators -- and the
private sector isn't limited by
constitutional restrictions on the
government.
[...]
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